I instantly turn off my brain and ears to anyone who describes themselves as 'zany' or 'mad' or anything like that. However, that's not unfair, that's just because they're the most boring cunts on the planet. The unfair part is that I tend to think less of people whom others have described in such a way, even though I should give them the benefit of the doubt. Oh well

For a cartoon sketch show it's fine. I probably only get ~10% of the references they make, but the timing is generally what makes it watchable.

Having watched it since before it was "cancelled" a lot of the sketches have engraved in my brain, much like The Simpsons. It's pretty hard not to quote "It's a bit like xyz in Family Guy" in teh right company.

Most people who overly quote/reference things have normally just fairly recently discovered it.

FuzzyDuck wrote:
I automatically assume that if you wear skinny jeans and glasses, you've actually got 20/20 vision and are a trust-fund tosser.

On the other side of the coin, I hate it when people assume I have perfect vision and think I'm being a twat whenever I wear my glasses just because I don't wear them all the time. Therefore whenever anyone says "Why are you wearing glasses", I assume they're a knobhead.

It's funny when something becomes to popular, perhaps in some subgroup, that everyone else (perhaps in some same subgroup) see it as cliquey, and decides everyone who likes it is a member of a clique, thus finding commonality with everyone else who didn't like said popular thing and forming their own clique.

For what it's worth, I always preferred American Dad.

Also, my grandmum reads the Mail, and I'm pretty sure she has a headscarf or two, although there days I'm pretty sure she only carries her pac-a-mac one.